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Thursday, July 26, 2012

The Case for Mitt Romney - Part 2

Readers of this blog are probably figuring out that I am waiting in great anticipation for a certain sitting president to present his vision for the next 4 years in something other then grandiose terms. Thus far we have been told that if Romney wins, women will no longer have bridges to drive to Planned Parent because Romney spent all the money exporting paper mills to the Cayman Islands, or something like that. There is no plan for the next four years. We can’t even seem to agree on a tax plan for next year. But, I said early on that this series would be a Pro Romney chain and not a dump on our President, I’ve got plenty of other posts that do that. I do, however, want to help paint the picture of what the next four years may look like under a Romney Presidency.

The Case for Mitt Romney – Part 2: The Romney Plan

First I have to lower some expectations. Day 1: Pulled straight from his television commercial. Romney has stated that he plans to fast track approval for the Keystone XL Pipeline. The sad truth, this is all but impossible now, it’s too late, we missed the boat, and guess who was right there for the rebound, a company by the name CNOOC, a Chinese state owned conglomerate, now has a roughly $15 Billion dollar investment in the Canadian Sands project by buying Nexen. Just another stepping stone is China’s buildup of owning and controlling a disproportionate share of the Worlds high dollar natural resources. What this means is that if it comes down to running pipelines from Canada to the Gulf coast vs. the Pacific coast of Canada, CNOOC is who will be making the decision. We had our window, and we blew it.

His other major task for ‘Day 1’ is repealing Obama Care, or at the least grant executive waivers to all the states. I have spent hours upon hours trying to glean some insight as to what a likely scenario will be in the coming years when it comes to this legislation. All I know for certain is that the process in which we got to this point makes no true sense to me, and I’m sure between now and November I, and a few million other people in the blogosphere, will have plenty to say about the feasibility of any action against Obama Care. It sounds simple enough, but without 60 votes in the senate, which I would declare unlikely, this is probably going to get messier well before it gets better. If some states use waivers and others don’t, if some states opt out of the Medicaid expansions and others don’t, then this law could end up being a cluster of ever changing parts which usually means an even bigger bureaucracy to manage all the different aspects that change state by state.

Wow, convinced yet? Me neither, but here is the good news…

Mitt Romney’s Tax Policy: We are told again, and again, and again, that the US is sitting on a huge pile of cash. Why? In a word, uncertainty. How many times has a fight broken out on capitol hill over taxes? Does Obama Care have taxes? Are we extending the Bush era tax cuts? For who? Payroll tax holidays? New taxes on the wealthy? What about capital gains tax rates? There are so many variables playing into what we will be paying on taxes anywhere from 5 months to 5 years from now. If you are preparing a family budget and are told your paychecks may be shrinking by 0%, 5%, 10%, 15% next year, would you go out and spend money now? Or start making sure your savings account was in good shape. (Hint: The smart answer is the latter one, and I hope most of you are doing this regardless).

So, what is the Romney plan? To stop the insanity! To throw out all these stupid temporary tax plans and put in a new low rate, broad based plan that removes many exemptions and simplifies the code. Without indulging in too many details, people have been comparing this approach to the Reagan Tax plan of cutting rates in 1981, then revamping the entire system in 1986. We could go into ideals of the Laffer curve or the law of diminishing returns, people will say that this will hurt the lower class, but from 1981 to 1987, the era of Reagen Tax cuts, the lowest Quintile (that is to say the bottom 20% of wage earners) effective tax rate went from 0.5% <drum roll please> to -0.6%. That’s negative point six percent, and then continued down to -1.6% by the time Reagan left office in 1989. And under the Bush Tax cuts for the wealthy from 2001 at -5.6%, it continued down to -6.2% by the time 2004 rolled around (Bush tax cuts from 01 and 03 fully implemented). Yet from ’81 to ’89 (Reagan era) total income tax receipts rose 56%, GDP rose prior to the ’09 collapse Bush saw a 15% increase, and that was not tax reform, simply a reduction in the tax rates. Romney’s plan speaks much more to the principals of the former.

A common part of Romney’s Fiscal plan is deficit reduction. Romney speaks very highly of the Paul Ryan budget plan. Although most people openly admit getting that bill passed through congress as is will be daunting, even if major Republican shift occurs this fall. The Romney plan calls for a day one <eek, I put this in the wrong spot!> reduction of discretionary spending of 5%. If you do not believe our current Debt ot GDP ratio is alarming then you probably also believe that denial is just a river in Egypt. Here is a short list of developed countries with more debt than their annual GDP; Greece, Italy, Portugal, Ireland, and as of 2011, the US of A has a Debt to GDP ratio of 103%. Not exactly a list of countries reaping the benefits of state investment. The Romney Plan is geared to stop this trend with no cost growth strategy (elimination of ‘Red Tape’), cuts to government spending, and gradual implementation of austerity measures.

Speaking of red tape, that is a line used far too often in politics today. If you have not hear Gov. Romney’s speech to the VFW, I would recommend watching the video, it’s less then 20 minutes and has some good insight to the Romney approach when it comes to cutting the bureaucracy, he tells a tale of navel ship building over the years;

“And while our output has declined, the bureaucracy has increased. There is enormous waste. Let me give you an example: During World War Two, we built 1,000 ships per year with 1,000 people in the Bureau of Ships – the purchasing department, if you will. In the 1980’s we built 17 ships per year, with 4,000 people in purchasing. Today, for 9 ships a year, it takes 25,000 people!

Let me tell you, as a conservative businessman who has spent most of his life in the private sector, I look at that kind of inefficiency and bloat and say, “Let me at it.”

The devil may lie in the details, but this makes sense to me, it has been too long since we have had an honest administrator leading this country. Too many items are passed down the political hierarchy and not enough simple questions asked to justify these figures.

I have spent an unhealthy amount of time looking at the numbers, reading into everyone from Paul Krugman to Thomas Sowell in an attempt to interpret the mountains of data. My personal conclusion, most economists are not stupid, but, you can spin numbers any way you want to support any theory. The real question at hand is not does a plan work on its merits, it is in how well it will be received. Having a fair, simple, low rate set in place for a long term, I believe, would be the best thing for the economy right now. Tax rates skyrocketed in the wake of World War II with little negative impact, why? People wanted to win a war, in the decades that followed, the US has conceded a good sum of it’s share of the global wealth, not necessarily a bad thing at its face, but we cannot count on exclusivity of our economic power to carry up forward, we have to attract business here from other countries and retain and grow our businesses here so they can compete with these global companies. This is a significant shift from our thinking of the 50’s, 60’s, and 70’s when logistics and communication capacities simply didn’t allow for the level of competition we see today. The Romney tax and regulatory plans acts upon these ideals and creates a business environment that can compete with other developed countries. We took similar steps in the 80’s when Japan emerged as a global competitor and when the USSR was our main competition, now it’s China and the EU. America can compete with the best of them, we have wealth, resources, and ingenuity, we need a set of rules that allows us to utilize these safely, cleanly, and last but not least, practically so that our wealth is not invested else wear, our resources are not exploited, and our ingenuity is not usurped as a result of an uneven playing field.

Next in this Series, Either “The Wisdom in his VP Choice”, or some other topic if he chooses someone stupid like Jan Brewer, or "Nevermind, I'm moving to Canada" if it's Sarah Palin.

Sunday, July 22, 2012

Ron Santo, the way I remember him.



"Well would you look at that." A classic line used in the wake of a great play. The humor in the line being, of course, that on the radio it was hard to appreciate what Ron was seeing, but you couldn't help but smile at times like these. It was like listening to your quirky old uncle recant tales of a simpler time with context lost over the years. Always enjoying the company and allowing our minds to relax back to an age when life ran a little slower and worries didn't weigh so heavily on the sole. This was the gift of Ron Santo, to remind us that it was okay to be passionate about a game without forgetting that at the end of the day, it was just a game. To remind us of important things in life while giving so much of oneself to the betterment of others, be it his quirks on the air or his unfaltering support to find a cure for diabetes, his phenomenal career he had with the Cubs, or his unwavering belief that one day Cubs fans everywhere would know it was all worth the wait.

I sit here typing in solace with Cubs nation on this day as we celebrate the bitter sweetness of a great man obtaining the ultimate sign of respect and gaining entry into the Baseball Hall of Fame. Ron Santo had an impact that spanned several generations for the game of baseball, and in particular the game of baseball.

My story begins in the twilight of his contributions to the game, not having lived in the dead ball era, I developed my love for players like Derrick Lee and Aramis Ramirez before learning the history of the people that were a part of the team and organization I was falling in love with.

I first fell in love with Santo living in central Iowa some 8 years ago. My wife, a die hard Cubs fan, rekindled a childhood love the game and for the cubs in the years following the infamous '03 season. It's easy to be a Cubs fan in Iowa where WGN TV airs most of the games, but for those days a regional broadcast would leave you watching a Cardinals or Royals game in the Des Moines area, we had the ability to turn on our radios to WGN Radio and turn off the outside world for a few hours. I remember grabbing some ice slushies from the local Sonic store, going home, and laughing as much as we'd cheer along with Pat and Ron. The best televised games always featured Ron doing something with Len and Bob in the pregame, wether it was telling his story of coffee being spilled during his first radio broadcast, or just laughing alongside some of the other Cubs great. His personality just poured through the radio and through the television screen.


The exercise of trying to choose your personally most powerful Cub memory including Ron involves reflecting on moments like Ron laying a smooch on Wood during 2008's Division Championship celebration, or his fantastic speech at the Friendly Confines where he said, in reference to the flag displaying his retired number 10, "This is my Hall of Fame.". But the ultimate moment for me was a few years back where while on my way to grab a hot dog sometime during the 5th in a game against the Marlins, I caught a glimpse of the man himself, it took a moment to know who I was looking at he was leaving an elevator at Wrigley in an odd sort of waddle. It was not a particularly eventful moment, the ground did not split open, nor was there a bright flash of light over the horizon, it was a simple and altruistic moment for realizing how close you came to someone you idolize so much. It gave him a realism to me that no amount of story telling or shared laughs can fully encompass through the radio waves.


In conclusion, I don't doubt that Cooperstown is a warmer and happier place for ,finally, having opened their doors to this legend, but his heart and spirit will always be dwelling somewhere between the broadcast booth and the bricks and ivy at Wrigley Field. Probably near the third base bag, suspended a few feet in the air between a pair of clicking heels.

Thursday, July 19, 2012

DRAT! I thought for a moment the President had a plan...


I crave hearing about what this President is going to do to tackle the debt. You hear me, CRAVE IT! I want this President to lay out what he would do in the next 4 years so that we don’t eclipse the $20 Trillion dollar mark by the time he’d be out of office. But that is a horrible story, here is my set up. While I was going around the web, I happened upon an add that made my heart leap! Could it be true?!? An add that is called “Obama’s Deficit Plan”. Not only that, but the link actually takes you to BarrackObama.com, the official website of the President’s re-election campaign.

Go Here;
http://www.democraticunderground.com/discuss/duboard.php?az=view_all&address=104x560709#560737 (went there on 7/18, my apologies, the ad appears to have been replaced since)

See an add for Barrack Obama’s Website here;


Which links you to www.barrackobama.com/our-vote , containing a beautiful banner of Obama, Michelle, and one of their daughters, and displaying the following text; The President’s Deficit Plan in his own words.

FULL DISCLOSER, the text is ripped right off the website, but you may notice some liberties with the image


WHAT THE 2012 ELECTION MEANS FOR WOMEN
Since taking office, President Obama has turned around an economy that was losing hundreds of thousands of jobs each month, ended the war in Iraq, signed the Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act into law, and cut taxes for every working family.
So this November, the choice for women is clear: We can keep moving forward and build on the progress we've made—or we can go backward to more tax cuts for the wealthy, the same policies that led to massive job losses and punished the middle class, and an era when women didn't have control over our own health choices.
Will we re-elect the candidate who has our backs and is fighting for our families? Or will we turn back?
“REGARDLESS OF WHO WE ARE, WE SHARE THIS VISION: HARD WORK SHOULD PAY OFF, RESPONSIBILITY SHOULD BE REWARDED, AND EVERYONE IN THIS COUNTRY SHOULD GET A FAIR SHOT BUT PLAY BY THE SAME RULES.”—MICHELLE OBAMA
WHAT'S AT STAKE FOR WOMEN THIS NOVEMBER:

So this is the Obama BUDGET DEFICIT PLAN, let’s do quick breakdown of the key points;

Number of mentions of Budget: 0
Number of mentions of Deficit: 0
Number of mentions of Plan: 0
Number of mentions of Women: 4

I guess that’s it. The plan to get the country out of this crippling spiral of debt is to get more woman better and fairer paying jobs. This in itself isn’t a bad thing by any means. The sad part is if I proceed to say that this plan doesn’t address the debt problem I’ll probably be deemed a sexist by a loud minority of people. Some of those same people may even take offense to me, a middle aged white male from the Midwest, using the word ‘minority’ in the last sentence. There is a blip about tax policy in this statement, but Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke stated just this week to congress higher taxes could do more harm than good in these economic conditions.